Nov. 30th, 2005

nori1980: (monkeydance by mediocrechick)
THIS IS SO MUCH FUN!
found on [livejournal.com profile] lennongirls LJ..

Reply to this entry with whatever is in your cut/paste buffer. Just click on "comment on this" and do a right click-paste into the resulting box.

Just do eeeet..
nori1980: (sssh)
A multi-country co-production.. I don't think it'll hit the US screens though. (ETA: It is the French submission for best foreign language film at the academy awards!!)

If you're in Europe go and watch this fine piece of cinema!

I saw it yesterday with Tom and Stef and we were all impressed! Not so much with the singing, but the acting, story and overall style were amazing!
If you're able to watch the movie, you should go and see it in it's original version with subtitles, cos, well.. the French speak French, the Germans German and.. well you get the picture..

Based on authentic incidents from the first year of WWI, it is about Scots, French and German soldiers celebrating Christmas 1914 together on the freezing front in France..

from europeanfilms.net:
Just before Christmas the Germans, led by Horstmayer (Daniel Brühl,from Good bye, Lenin!) have lined up against the allied front of the French (led by Guillaume Canet’s Lieutenant Audebert) and the Scots, led by Gordon (Alex Ferns).

Amongst the Germans is the famous tenor Nikolaus Sprink (Benno Fürmann), who has been drafted into the army just like anyone else, much to the displeasure of his Danish girlfriend Anna Sörensen (Diane Kruger), who is also an opera singer. Through the right connections, she is able to come and visit him at the front and on Christmas eve Sprink and Sörensen find themselves together in the trenches. When they hear the Scots playing their bagpipes, the tenor-come-soldier, with all the flair of a man of the theatre, hops out of the trenches into no man’s land, singing on the top of his longs with only a Christmas-tree for protection.

The universality and sentimentality of the peace-preaching Christmas songs hesitantly lead the three commanding officers to call a temporary truce. But rather than staying in their respective trenches, each side soon joins the officers in no man’s land for an exchange of Christmas wishes, chocolate and spirits, only to find (not unsurprisingly) that the enemy is more similar to them than the war-propaganda would have them believe.As Lieutenant Audebert later puts it "we [French soldiers] have more in common with the German soldiers than with the French politicians that are sending us off into war". But what are the
consequences of this? Where and when does the Christmas spirit end and do they have to revert back to killing one another, as their respective countries demand and expect of good soldiers?
read on.. )
nori1980: (photobox)
yes, ok.. I am bored..








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